Candidates' Wives Lead the Way in Wooing Women Voters

Candidates' wives face the spotlight in almost every election, but at this point in the 2012 presidential campaign, Ann Romney and Michelle Obama have taken center stage in a way few politicians' wives ever have.

While Mitt Romney's acceptance address had its moving moments, it was his wife who vied for the hearts of the American people -- especially American women -- Tuesday night.

And it was Ann Romney who upped the ante for first lady Michelle Obama to paint her husband as a hard-working son of a single mother and a devoted family man, rather than an out-of-touch bureaucrat, when the first lady takes the stage Tuesday night in primtime from Democrats' convention Charlotte, North Carolina.

Michelle Obama is expected to speak in the 10 p.m. ET hour after San Antonion Mayor Julian Castro.

Democrats will prominently feature the first lady and other female activists at their convention, a clear sign that despite Ann Romney's impassioned speech at the Republican National Convention, the so-called "women's vote" is not yet in the bag for the GOP.

A match-up of quotes from candidates and their wives' that ABC made in July illustrates how the women show a more empathetic side to Romney and Obama.

Now veteran journalist and author Tom Brokaw says Ann Romney and Michelle Obama are "the two most effective campaigners in both campaigns."

The DNC has released a list of 10 more women scheduled to take the podium in Charlotte. They include newcomers like Georgetown Law grad Sandra Fluke, as well as long-time Democrats like Nancy Keenan, the president of NARAL Pro-Choice America since 2004.

The first lady has maintained her popularity with Americans in recent years, unlike her husband. She scored a favorable rating from 66 percent of Americans polled in a Gallup report this May, the same score she received two years ago and just six points down from her peak of 72 percent.

But in the same poll, Romney ranked even worse with voters. The results reflected his struggle to win over the single women: Only 34 percent of women rated him favorably, and unmarried women especially had a negative impression of the former Massachusetts governor.

Even before her RNC speech, Ann Romney had been on the campaign trail trying to humanize her husband, insisting "he is funny, he is engaging, he is witty," in one memorable interview, where she offered to "unzip" the candidate.

But Tuesday's appearance seemed to really connect with the audience.

Massachusetts State Rep. Sheila Harrington, R-Groton, told CafeMom that members of her state's delegation have been "chomping at the bit" to tell voters what Romney is like as a person.

"No one can tell that story better than the mother of his children, his wife, the love of his life, and I think she really was able to get that across to people," Harrington said.

Former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice praised Ann Romney's speech for her ability to relate to it.

"I could just see Ann Romney's love and concern that I saw in my own family," Rice said on Fox News.

Ann Romney's appeal to women met its target in some cases, but for single and working mothers, the campaign has work to do, Bloomberg Television's Trish Regan said today on "Face the Nation."

"It's a little bit of a challenge for her," Regan said, speaking about the candidate's wife's trouble connecting with lower-to-middle class voters. "But without a doubt, Mitt Romney needs to get his message across to women."

But regardless of their current popularity with women, both Romney and Obama still have a chance to win over female voters if they seem more competent on election day, according to Regan.

"They're not marrying the guy, right?" she said. "They're hiring a man for the job and if he can prove he's the one, then he's got a better shot."